146

I was wondering if there is any way to escape a CDATA end token (]]>) within a CDATA section in an xml document. Or, more generally, if there is some escape sequence for using within a CDATA (but if it exists, I guess it'd probably only make sense to escape begin or end tokens, anyway).

Basically, can you have a begin or end token embedded in a CDATA and tell the parser not to interpret it but to treat it as just another character sequence.

Probably, you should just refactor your xml structure or your code if you find yourself trying to do that, but even though I've been working with xml on a daily basis for the last 3 years or so and I have never had this problem, I was wondering if it was possible. Just out of curiosity.

Edit:

Other than using html encoding...

5
  • 4
    First, i accept the answer as correct but note: Nothing precludes someone from encoding > as > within CData to ensure embedded ]]> will not be parsed as CDEnd. It simply means it's unexpected and that & must FIRST be encoded as & too so that the data can be properly decoded. Users of the document must know to decode this CData too. It's not unheard of since part of the purpose of CData is to contain content that a specific consumer understands how to handle. Such a CData just can't be expected to be interpreted properly by any generic consumer.
    – nix
    May 16, 2011 at 14:54
  • 1
    @nix, CDATA just provides an explicit way to declare text node content such that language tokens within (other than ]]>) do not get parsed. It specifically does not expand entity references like &gt; for this reason, so in a CDATA block, that just means those four characters, not '>'. To put it in perspective: in the xml spec, all text content is called "cdata", not just these sequences ("character data"). Also it's not about specific consuming agents. (Such a thing does exist though -- processing instructions (<?target instruction?>).
    – Semicolon
    Oct 11, 2015 at 5:37
  • (I should add, even if this sort of thing runs contrary to the original intent of the node, all is fair in the long & torturous battle with XML. I just feel it could be useful for readers to know that <![CDATA[]]> was not actually designed for that purpose.)
    – Semicolon
    Oct 11, 2015 at 5:48
  • 1
    @Semicolon CDATA was designed to allow anything: they are used to escape blocks of text containing characters which would otherwise be recognized as markup That implies CDATA too since it is also markup. But, in fact, you don't need the double encoding I implied. ]]&gt; is an acceptable means of encoding a CDEnd within a CDATA.
    – nix
    Oct 11, 2015 at 19:14
  • True, you wouldn't need double encoding -- but you would still need the agent to have special knowledge, since the parser wouldn't parse &gt; as >. That's what you mean though, I think? That you could replace them as you see fit, after parsing?
    – Semicolon
    Oct 11, 2015 at 19:41

10 Answers 10

180

You have to break your data into pieces to conceal the ]]>.

Here's the whole thing:

<![CDATA[]]]]><![CDATA[>]]>

The first <![CDATA[]]]]> has the ]]. The second <![CDATA[>]]> has the >.

153

You cannot escape a CDATA end sequence. Production rule 20 of the XML specification is quite clear:

[20]    CData      ::=      (Char* - (Char* ']]>' Char*))

EDIT: This product rule literally means "A CData section may contain anything you want BUT the sequence ']]>'. No exception.".

EDIT2: The same section also reads:

Within a CDATA section, only the CDEnd string is recognized as markup, so that left angle brackets and ampersands may occur in their literal form; they need not (and cannot) be escaped using "&lt;" and "&amp;". CDATA sections cannot nest.

In other words, it's not possible to use entity reference, markup or any other form of interpreted syntax. The only parsed text inside a CDATA section is ]]>, and it terminates the section.

Hence, it is not possible to escape ]]> within a CDATA section.

EDIT3: The same section also reads:

2.7 CDATA Sections

[Definition: CDATA sections may occur anywhere character data may occur; they are used to escape blocks of text containing characters which would otherwise be recognized as markup. CDATA sections begin with the string "<![CDATA[" and end with the string "]]>":]

Then there may be a CDATA section anywhere character data may occur, including multiple adjacent CDATA sections inplace of a single CDATA section. That allows it to be possible to split the ]]> token and put the two parts of it in adjacent CDATA sections.

ex:

<![CDATA[Certain tokens like ]]> can be difficult and <invalid>]]> 

should be written as

<![CDATA[Certain tokens like ]]]]><![CDATA[> can be difficult and <valid>]]> 
17
  • 2
    Indeed. Well, I'm not an academic type but as I said in the question, I'm just curious about this. To be honest, I'll just take your word on this, because I can barely make sense out of the syntax used for the rule. Thanks for your answer. Oct 21, 2008 at 23:17
  • 52
    This is not an academic question. Think about an RSS feed of a blog post that contains a discussion about CDATA.
    – usr
    Jul 12, 2011 at 15:05
  • 4
    I meant "academic" in the sense: "interesting to discuss, but without practical use". Generally, CDATA is not useful, it's just a way to serialize XML text, and it's semantically equivalent to escaping special chars using character entities &lt; &gt; and &quot;. Characters entities is the simplest, most robust and most general solution, so use that instead of CDATA sections. If you use a proper XML library (instead of building XML out of strings) you don't even have to think about it.
    – ddaa
    Jan 12, 2012 at 10:26
  • 5
    I just got bitten by this one because I am trying to encode some compressed Javascript into a <script> tag like: <script>/*<![CDATA[*/javascript goes here/*]]>*/</script> and my javascript includes just that sequence! I like the idea of splitting into multiple CDATA sections ...
    – NickZoic
    Mar 23, 2012 at 1:11
  • 6
    I experienced this in the real world. While reading the wikipedia dump and writing another xml file I encountered this on the page for the National Transportation Safety Board. It contained US$>100 million (2013) for the budget in the infobox. The source xml contained [[United States dollar|US$]]&gt;100 million (2013) which was translated to [[United States dollar|US$]]>100 million (2013) by the reader and the writer opted to use CDATA to escape the text and failed. Oct 15, 2015 at 14:03
27

simply replace ]]> with ]]]]><![CDATA[>

0
17

You do not escape the ]]> but you escape the > after ]] by inserting ]]><![CDATA[ before the >, think of this just like a \ in C/Java/PHP/Perl string but only needed before a > and after a ]].

BTW,

S.Lott's answer is the same as this, just worded differently.

2
  • 4
    This way of saying it gives people the wrong idea. This is not escaping. ]]]]><![CDATA[> isn't some magical sequence for ]]>. ]]]]> has ]] characters as data, and ]]> ends the current CDATA section. <![CDATA[> starts a new CDATA section and puts > in it. They are actually two different elements and will be treated differently when working with a DOM parser. You should be aware of that. This way of doing it is similar to ]]]><![CDATA[]>, except it puts ] in the first and ]> in the second CDATA. The difference remains.
    – Aidiakapi
    Apr 11, 2013 at 12:24
  • 1
    The difference is overstated, since CDATA content is treated as a literal span of escaped text. Only when messing with the DOM does it really matter, and at that level you're dealing with other invisible boundaries anyway like text, comment, and processing instruction nodes.
    – Beejor
    Oct 3, 2016 at 3:26
7

S. Lott's answer is right: you don't encode the end tag, you break it across multiple CDATA sections.

How to run across this problem in the real world: using an XML editor to create an XML document that will be fed into a content-management system, try to write an article about CDATA sections. Your ordinary trick of embedding code samples in a CDATA section will fail you here. You can imagine how I learned this.

But under most circumstances, you won't encounter this, and here's why: if you want to store (say) the text of an XML document as the content of an XML element, you'll probably use a DOM method, e.g.:

XmlElement elm = doc.CreateElement("foo");
elm.InnerText = "<[CDATA[[Is this a problem?]]>";

And the DOM quite reasonably escapes the < and the >, which means that you haven't inadvertently embedded a CDATA section in your document.

Oh, and this is interesting:

XmlDocument doc = new XmlDocument();

XmlElement elm = doc.CreateElement("doc");
doc.AppendChild(elm);

string data = "<![[CDATA[This is an embedded CDATA section]]>";
XmlCDataSection cdata = doc.CreateCDataSection(data);
elm.AppendChild(cdata);

This is probably an ideosyncrasy of the .NET DOM, but that doesn't throw an exception. The exception gets thrown here:

Console.Write(doc.OuterXml);

I'd guess that what's happening under the hood is that the XmlDocument is using an XmlWriter produce its output, and the XmlWriter checks for well-formedness as it writes.

4
  • Well, I had an almost "real world" example. I usually load Xml from Flash that contains html markup within CDATA sections. Having a way to escape it could be useful, I guess. But anyway, in that case, the CDATA content is usually valid XHTML, and so the "outer" CDATA could be avoided altogether. Oct 22, 2008 at 0:18
  • 2
    CDATA can nearly always be avoided altogether. I find that people who struggle with CDATA very frequently don't understand what they're really trying to do and/or how the technology they're using really works. Oct 24, 2008 at 8:44
  • Oh, I should also add that the only reason that the CMS I alluded to in my answer used CDATA was that I wrote it, and I didn't understand what I was really trying to do and/or how the technology works. I didn't need to use CDATA. Oct 24, 2008 at 8:48
  • If you're using .net, the preceding comment about CDATA being avoidable is spot on - just write the content as a string and the framework will do all the escaping (and unescaping on read) for you from the real world....... xmlStream.WriteStartElement("UnprocessedHtml"); xmlStream.WriteString(UnprocessedHtml); xmlStream.WriteEndElement(); Aug 8, 2010 at 15:28
3

Here's another case in which ]]> needs to be escaped. Suppose we need to save a perfectly valid HTML document inside a CDATA block of an XML document and the HTML source happens to have it's own CDATA block. For example:

<htmlSource><![CDATA[ 
    ... html ...
    <script type="text/javascript">
        /* <![CDATA[ */
        -- some working javascript --
        /* ]]> */
    </script>
    ... html ...
]]></htmlSource>

the commented CDATA suffix needs to be changed to:

        /* ]]]]><![CDATA[> *//

since an XML parser isn't going to know how to handle javascript comment blocks

1
  • This is not a special case. Simply replace ]]> with ]]]]><![CDATA[> still applies here. The fact that it's JavaScript, or commented is not important. Jun 24, 2016 at 11:43
0

In PHP: '<![CDATA['.implode(explode(']]>', $string), ']]]]><![CDATA[>').']]>'

0

A cleaner way in PHP:

   function safeCData($string)
   {
      return '<![CDATA[' . str_replace(']]>', ']]]]><![CDATA[>', $string) . ']]>';
   }

Don't forget to use a multibyte-safe str_replace if required (non latin1 $string):

   function mb_str_replace($search, $replace, $subject, &$count = 0)
   {
      if (!is_array($subject))
      {
         $searches = is_array($search) ? array_values($search) : array ($search);
         $replacements = is_array($replace) ? array_values($replace) : array ($replace);
         $replacements = array_pad($replacements, count($searches), '');
         foreach ($searches as $key => $search)
         {
            $parts = mb_split(preg_quote($search), $subject);
            $count += count($parts) - 1;
            $subject = implode($replacements[$key], $parts);
         }
      }
      else
      {
         foreach ($subject as $key => $value)
         {
            $subject[$key] = mb_str_replace($search, $replace, $value, $count);
         }
      }
      return $subject;
   }
2
  • Can you explain your downvote? Saying that I did a mistake isn't as useful as explaining where it is.
    – Alain
    Feb 6, 2014 at 9:08
  • 1
    There is no need to do multibyte safe replace if you are using UTF-8. I didn't downvote though:)
    – frodeborli
    Jun 28, 2019 at 8:29
0

I'd just like to add that it also works if you break the CDATA end tag ]]> between the ]], like this: ] ]]><![CDATA[ ]>

ex.

<![CDATA[Certain tokens like ]]]><![CDATA[]> can be difficult and <valid> but <unconventional>]]> 

However, it is the globally accepted convention to break the ]]> before the > as shown in the other answers here.

<![CDATA[Certain tokens like ]]]]><![CDATA[> can be difficult and <valid> and <conventional>]]> 
-2

See this structure:

<![CDATA[
   <![CDATA[
      <div>Hello World</div>
   ]]]]><![CDATA[>
]]>

For the inner CDATA tag(s) you must close with ]]]]><![CDATA[> instead of ]]>. Simple as that.

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